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The Deer at Lammas Tide: Nine Sabbat Tales
The Deer at Lammas Tide: Nine Sabbat Tales
The Deer at Lammas Tide: Nine Sabbat Tales
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The Deer at Lammas Tide: Nine Sabbat Tales

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Everyday practitioners of the Craft of the Wise encounter magick in their lives. A young woman confronts her prejudices in a dramatic way; a young archaeologist finds a key to his future by a glimpse into a 2,000-year-old past; at Samhain, the Witches' New Year, a young attorney finds the courage to let go of her first love; and the members of a circle of Goddess women experience joy, regret, violence, and love through one turn of the Wheel of the Year.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherDiana Read
Release dateMar 16, 2014
ISBN9781311962928
The Deer at Lammas Tide: Nine Sabbat Tales
Author

Diana Read

D.M. Read lives in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States with her family. She enjoys herb gardening, cooking, reading, travel, and writing fiction.

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    Book preview

    The Deer at Lammas Tide - Diana Read

    The Deer at Lammas Tide:

    Nine Sabbat Tales

    By D.M. Read

    Copyright 2014 D.M. Read

    Smashwords Edition

    Smashwords Edition, License Notes

    This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your favorite ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    TABLE of CONTENTS

    The Deer at Lammas Tide

    A Little Mabon Magick

    A Stillness at Samhain

    Yule Tide

    Roses at Imbolc

    Ostara, with Thunder

    Breathing Deeply at Beltane

    Mayhem at Midsummer

    A Promise at Lammas

    Preview of Witchfire - Available June 2014

    About the Author

    Connect With the Author

    End Notes

    The Deer at Lammas Tide

    All seemed well in the orchard that morning and in the woods beyond.

    Walking from the Big House through the orchard, Aylwin paused on her way to breakfast to drink in the sight of a cluster of rosy-yellow apples against the pale blue sky that showed through the branches of the apple tree. She stood very still and breathed deeply, trying to fix the color and scent of the apples in her mind.

    She'd risen at dawn as usual, in company with her colleagues, to gather on the veranda of the Big House that served as their dormitory while the Great Barn's bedrooms were undergoing repairs. They sat on the wide veranda drinking coffee and talking in low voices while they watched the grey mist rise slowly from the wet lawn to reveal the shadowy deer coming out to nibble around the edges. They were mostly does and fawns, although the occasional buck appeared.

    Resuming her walk through the rows of apple trees, Aylwin turned a corner and stopped again. A doe was standing beneath one of the trees, nibbling apples from a low-hanging branch. Two dappled fawns, one on each side, stood close to their mother. Sunlight filtering through the foliage highlighted the spots on the fawns' backs and the lustrous dark eyes of the doe.

    Aylwin did not breathe at all, but sent up a prayer. Thank you, Diana, matron goddess, for giving me this moment of pure beauty and joy. I'll remember it for the rest of my life.

    The wind shifted slightly; the doe became aware of the human. In an instant she and the fawns leaped away through the orchard into the woods.

    In a mood compounded of exhilaration and reverence, Aylwin resumed her walk. It was time for breakfast in the Great Barn, where most of the commune's business was conducted. There was a great deal to do because it was the day before Lammas Eve.

    Tomorrow she and several others would spend the day baking the bread loaves for which the sabbat was named: Lammas derived from loaf-mass. The day after would be market day, which this year would fall on Lammas itself. Half the loaves they made would be sold at market; the other half would be retained to feed the commune. And two loaves would be placed on the altar, of course, in thanksgiving.

    I am lucky to be here, Aylwin thought as she savored her breakfast of granola and blueberries. I never thought I'd be doing anything like this—living miles out in the country, doing farm chores.

    Indeed, it was an unlikely thought for a city-bred teacher of high school English. But during an Ostara ritual several months ago, in which the leading priestess had invited everyone to aspect a patron god or matron goddess, Aylwin had received the message that was to change her life. Diana had delivered the message in no uncertain terms: You are too contented with your home and hearth. You need to get out into the woods more. You need to spend a great deal more time looking at the moon than you have been.

    Struck by these words, Aylwin had mused on them for some time afterwards. It was true that she loved her life: loved her little walled city garden with its beds of herbs and flowers, its espaliered peach trees, its pots of strawberries and lavender. She enjoyed making her way around the city by bicycle if the weather were fine, rejoiced in the slow change of the seasons, took great delight in curling up with her books at night in her favorite recliner with a cat or two. Yes, she was far too content.

    By sheer chance an opportunity to work on the farming commune had offered itself through a flyer at the local farmers' market: free room and board for two months in the summer in exchange for eight hours' work a day, six days a week. Aylwin's request was accepted immediately, and now here she was—windblown, tanned, and insect-bitten, but happy.

    Just as she was lifting the last spoonful of granola to her mouth, the voice of Falcon, one of the commune's administrators, boomed through the room. I have a few ANNOUNCEMENTS!

    Across the room Red Hawk, Falcon's husband, held a finger to his lips. Falcon grinned in acknowledgment and resumed his speech. Okay, folks, you probably don't want to hear this but we've had a visit from a county board member and a landowner. They've declared a deer cull on the land adjoining ours, which means—Falcon held up a hand to hush the murmur of protest that rose from twenty outraged throats—that we will not interfere with the hunters in any way. No attempts to engage them in conversation, no attempts to stop them, nothing! You know the trouble we've had getting permission to rent this land. The owners think we're a bunch of hippies that drum all night around the fire circle and go skinny dipping in the lake. We'll have to just ignore the deer hunters and go on with our work.

    Someone raised a hand. When does the deer cull begin?

    Today. And oh, by the way, I checked—it's bow hunting, not guns. Be careful as you go about your chores and don't wear anything white.

    Someone else raised a hand. "More importantly, when does it stop?"

    Saturday will be the last day. Now, with regard to the Lammas ritual, the ritual planning team will meet in the Big House this afternoon and…

    Aylwin, who was not a member of the ritual planning team, returned to her breakfast, seething. A deer cull! Blast the county board, the landowners, and all who would participate in the cull! She thought of the entrancing sight she'd been granted just half an hour ago and felt a wrench of the heart at the thought that any of them, doe or fawns, might be killed.

    A thought struck her: as soon as she finished this morning's chores she'd visit the Queen Oak in the woods, where she had put up a little statue of Diana and erected a small altar of fieldstones. She would implore the Goddess to spare the lives of the wild things in the woods—the deer, the rabbits, the squirrels, the birds.

    After lunch, hurrying through the woods to the Queen Oak, Aylwin picked as many wildflowers as she could fit into the jar of water she carried with her—white Queen Anne's lace, black-eyed susans, blue wild chicory, yellow lady's slipper. After placing the jar on the altar she bowed her head. Diana, Goddess of the woods and all that is wild, please accept my gift of flowers and protect all your beautiful creatures. Let them come to no harm! So mote it be.

    As she straightened up, still looking at the statue, she felt the hairs rise on the back of her neck. She sensed she was not alone. Someone else was there: someone in the woods, perhaps, watching her. Slowly, she turned around. Out of the corner of her eye she saw a sudden flicker of movement behind the trees but she could not discern whether it was animal or human.

    Well, back to work. It was her turn to pick the lettuces for tonight's dinner. Aylwin made her way quickly back to the Great Barn and the greenhouse. She stopped to laugh at the sight of the white duck chivvying a group of hens away from the barn toward the springhouse. The white duck reminded her of a drill instructor in charge of a gang of raw recruits: the chickens appeared to be in awe of him, scurrying along every time he flapped his wings and quacked.

    That evening after Affinity Group Ritual, Aylwin, still deep in thought, found herself walking behind two of the priestesses, White Crane and Silver Oak, back to the dining hall for the usual after-ritual grounding meal. This was simply apple cider or herb tea, along with nuts, honey, and slices of fruit bread.

    There was a sudden noise ahead, then the two in front stopped dead and exclaimed in surprise and concern, Great Mother!

    Coming up alongside the priestesses, Aylwin saw that a bird's nest had fallen from the eaves of the dining hall, along with two sinuous black snakes. The baby birds' cheeping was quickly stilled as the snakes swallowed them, made short work of the two unhatched eggs, and slithered off.

    Oh, how awful! Aylwin clutched White Crane's arm. Did you see? Oh, those poor babies!

    Aylwin, dear, White Crane said, "it is the way of Goddess. There is nothing we could have done and nothing we should have done. It is not for us to interfere."

    Silver Oak patted Aylwin's arm reassuringly. We don't like to look at 'nature red in tooth and claw,' my dear. But it's part of the endless cycle of life. The big fish eats the little fish and we eat the big fish…

    Not I, Aylwin said. I'm vegetarian.

    But still. You drink milk from cows, you eat eggs from chickens, you consume honey from bees. All part of the cycle, Aylwin, remember that.

    Aylwin bowed her head in assent. The priestesses were right. She was as guilty as anyone of exploiting the animal kingdom. She resolved to become a vegan. Sick at heart, she could barely force down the tea and bread, and went to bed still in a somber mood.

    The next morning found

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